Auburn baseball's biggest concern after latest flop? A lack of identity
After a run-rule loss to home to Jacksonville State, Auburn baseball has plenty of troubles. Perhaps the biggest concern, a lacking identity.
AUBURN — It all looked and felt rather unfamiliar after Auburn baseball 's latest contest. Under the lights at Plainsman Park , the 12th-ranked Tigers dropped a midweek in the worst of fashions, falling 15-4 to Jacksonville State in eight innings, with the Gamecocks handing Auburn its first run-rule defeat at home in exactly two years. The result was disheartening, undoubtedly, but in case there was any questioning its significance, all one had to do was look out to left field and see one man — head coach Butch Thompson — addressing his entire team.
For nearly 15 minutes. As for what was said, Thompson initially declined to comment, though one of his seniors summed it up. "We need to make sure we’re playing for the name on the front instead of the name on the back of our jerseys," Logan Gregorio said.
"I’m confident that we’ll do that. We already do that, but we’re going to make sure we keep the team centered from here on out and continue to grind every single day, because we know it’s a privilege that we wear Auburn on the front of our jersey. " Eventually Thompson did go a little further, with plenty to say about both the night and the big picture, but his most pertinent comments encapsulated Auburn's biggest disappointment since SEC play began.
"We've been saying that we've got more offense, but it hasn’t consistently shown up," he said. "When it has, like two of the three games last weekend, it hasn't been consistent enough to help us keep going, so I'm concerned about the growth of that — and really, Game 32, I'm concerned about the identity. If I had asked them to recite, 'What's our identity as an offense?